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Mannen på
taket (1976)
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Directed
by:
Bo Widerberg |
INTERNATIONAL TITLE
The
Man on the Roof |
COUNTRY
Sweden |
GENRE
Crime/Action |
RUNNING
TIME
110 minutes |
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Produced
by:
Per Berglund |
Written by
(based on a novel by Maj Sjöwall and Per Wahlöö):
Bo Widerberg |
Review
This police procedural, the third in a
long series of adaptation of Sjöwall/Wahlöö's novels about police
detective Martin Beck, was the most expensive Scandinavian film ever
at the time of production. In an international context, however,
this is still a low-budget movie, which makes its gritty realism and
exhilarating action all the more impressive. Mannen på taket
presents Stockholm's police force as well-trained and rather unprepared
at the same time. And yes, history has shown that this is a rather
accurate description of Scandinavian police in general. The story is centered
around the atypical police protagonist Beck (Carl-Gustaf Lindstedt),
whose main assets are that he is thorough and unbiased – arguably
two important skills to have in this profession – but which
hardly had been symbolic in an action movie context. Otherwise, Beck is
both physically unfit, not particularly quick-witted, and seemingly
not an expert marksman. He needs help from all his colleagues in
order to solve this case, and combined with Bo Widerberg's (Elvira
Madigan) documentarian style, modern camerawork and feverish
action sequences, this gives Mannen på taket an unprecedented
realism, and not only by 1970s Swedish standards.
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